tv Sunday Morning CBS June 12, 2016 9:00am-10:30am EDT
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historical base for this summertime obsession as anna warner will make clear. >> just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water 100 years after the crew summer of the shark return to a town in new jersey and unlikely. >> almost like a frenzy. it absolutely was. >> what some call the real story behind "jaws" ahead on "sunday morning." >> i think we'll need a bigger boat, don't you? >> osgood: tonight is tony night on broadway and here on cbs as well. shawn hayes is a past nominee now performing the most heavenly stage role. as lee cowan. >> the opposition with
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>> next time you have the urge to swear is perhaps think of taking shawn hayes name in vein. >> he's playing god. >> like a -- it is. it does feel like that. >> confessions of a comic diety, later on "sunday morning." >> osgood: our summer song this morning is song from the dead not the grateful dead, but from a band known as dead and company. anthony mason will bring it to light. >> the grateful dead's and pop star john mayer may seem like unlikely duetf. >> something to say. >> only time i ever got nauseous. >> they are the front men now for dead and
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the band making sure the grateful dead's long strange trip goes on. >> hottest ticket on broadway this season is "ham elton" nominated for 16 tonys, this most conventional musicals came to be is the story mo ro,cc. >> alexander hamilton was the only immigrant. he came from nothing and helped forge a nation. >> we take it as given that hip-hop music is the music of the generation. >> 00 years later musical inspired as revolutionized broadway. >> from the page to the stage with alexander hamilton ahead on "sunday morning." spoiler alert, he dies. >> osgood: with rita braver
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remember their lines conor knighton is on the trail in the sand dunes national park. first headlines. the 12th of june, 2016. as we told you a mass shoot can at a gay nightclub in orlando. at least 20 people are dead, 42 others wounded the sus specsed gunman is dead. our cbs affiliate wknt has the latest. >> charlie was a very frightening night for a lot of people in the downtown orlando area. we're couple blocks north. this incident happened as that club of closing around 2:00 this morning. just heard from the police chief that his officers responded to that club after someone reported seeing man with a gun. they engaged wit
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then started holding 30 people hostage inside. that started stand off for hours. police communicated with some of the hostages inside a bathroom. the s.w.a.t. team stormed the club. they found the gunman dead inside he was armed with assault rifle and handgun, they say he also had an explosive device. this morning, the bomb squad still on the screen trying to see if there were any more explosives. they're not ruling out possible terrorism at this point. now an important note, one orlando police officer was injured in that shootout, the police chief says his life was spared by the kevlar helmet he was wearing. >> osgood: our cbs affiliate, thank you. second shooting incident in a day's time. christina, known for her appearances on
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fatal low shot of tore a concert. we'll get the latest on that. >> christina was gunned down while thronged by young fans. her brother marcus may have saved lives when he tackled the gunman before he shot and killed himself. >> it does appear this he came here to commit this crime. >> orlando police chief says the shooter, 27-year-old kevin james was heavily armed. authorities are searching his cell phone, computer and residence for clues. this video taken by a teen concert goer is her last performance. the 2-year-old was a youtube sensation even befe
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television debut. the murder led to outpouring. her coach, said in a statement, christina was a natural. a gifted talent that comes along so rarely she was taken too soon. >> the orlando venue did not have metal detectors. for "sunday morning," in new york. it. >> was a photo finish at the belmont stakes, new york's long island. creator overturned at the wire winning by a nose. exaggerator finished well back in the field. now today's weather severe thunderstorms will threaten the midwest, storms also pop up over the southeast. southwest will bake. but cooler in the northeast. for the week ahead, immediately of conditions from coast to coast. >> warning. a shark attack is next.
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in a group of gladiatorseum prepare for battle. carrying on their shoulders the legacy of a nation, and... enormous heads. go! [whistle] ♪ ♪ winning a presidential race is hard, but saving money with geico is easy. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. >> >> osgood: the warning shark. our cover story record by adam warner on the jersey shore. >> welcome to beach haven a
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solution of heaven on the new jersey shore. >> it's wonderful. we can't wait for another great summer here. >> i've been coming here since you was 18 month old. >> it's relaxing. it's a beautiful beach. >> the perfect police to take a dip. and built your mind at ease. unless, of course, you have a certain movie theme playing in your head. ♪ "jaws" left america trembling. you know the story. >> shark! >> a rogue shark terrorizing a tourist town. >> you're going to need a bigger boat. >> while the book and blockbuster film are fix, 100 years ago in new jersey there was the real thing with eerie
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similarities to "jaws." >> in one week. >> a series of deadly shark attacks. it began right here in beach haven. >> america thought they were having one last gentle innocent summer but that wasn't to be. >> author and physician has written about the 1916 event. >> extraordinary nature of the attack, the viciousness in that period. it still stands out, it stand out even more perhaps now. >> back then sharks were a distant off shore curiosity, it was widely assumed they would never those a threat. that all changed july 1, 1916. when a 15-year-old accountant from philadelphia went for a swim and was vicious low attacked. doctors said there was no doubt he'd been killed by a shark. fiay
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north in spring lake, a bellhop swam out, he, too, was killed. >> had case where there were no attacks or 50 or 100 years, now two men in their 20s where were viciously mauled by a shark. >> what happened next was the fear of pap i can. 25 miles north where the ocean waters meet the creek a sea captain walking near a drawbridge saw a large shark heading upstream. >> this is where he saw the shark. >> he went to him to look at the scene. >> how far from this bay are the attack sites. they're about mile one. >> in the next 45 minutes the shark swam that mile. up to a swimming hole popular with boys from the town. like 11-year-old lester stillwell. >> right whe
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now? >> exactly. >> it was here where the shark found stillwell in the deepest part of that swimming hole and took him under. it's such a serene spot. >> serene, tranquil, yes. >> you just would not expect -- no. >> that right here. >> you wouldn't. >> the other boys ran into town for help. 24-year-old stanley fisher was one of those who answered the call. he and others dove in to attempt to rescue. it was fisher who finally emerged with the boy's body. but the shark wasn't done. >> he had come up to a little bit of shallow bank, was viciously struck on the right side by this shark. it spun him around twice, took him under twice. >> the boy was dead. fisher died a few hours later. >> they dammed up the creek so the creek is more shallow than it would have
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>> for john, fisher's death isn't just facts it's family. stanley was his great uncle and something more. >> he's a man in your familiar low who died a tear row. >> he probably was a tear row, but i think he also was a man of his times. he knew the boys well, he was a member of the community. >> and the community and all of america it seemed wanted revenge. crowds descended on new jersey to hunt the shark. >> they set up bounty reward for sharks. used dine mice, took pitchforks and rifles and other weapons to try to hunt the shark. >> almost like a frenzy. >> it was absolutely a frenzy. sharks became public enemy number one. >> to this day, random shark attacks are always front page news. although they're extremely rare there were record 98 attacks
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six fatalities. last month sharks bit swimmers off the coast of florida and california. the experts say that humans are the real threat to sharks. with some 100 million killed every year primarily for shark fin soup. >> you can see above thee right now. >> there's like this one here. >> shark educators at the adventure aquarium outside philadelphia worked to convince people that sharks, if not exactly our friend, are a vital part of the ecosystem. >> what i really want people to understand to learn to love the under water ward and the oceans, sharks, out there to be revered not feared. to understand how wonderful they are, that they make up an important part of the food chain and not killing machines that are out there to eat
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>> we are not on their meany. sharks literally -- >> not on their menu? >> no. >> and there's no better way to convince us of that than to take us into the shark tank. >> i got ya. >> heading into the tank can make you nervous. while these sand bar sharks were curious came a little too close for come effort, these are not known for attacking humans. a far cry from the killer or killers a century ago. the 1916 jersey shore shark attacks ended soon after they began. great white shark was captured, the debate continues. was it the great white, a bull shark which can swim in fresh water or was it several sharks? >> still believe they stand out among shark attacks as the titani
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frequency, scientific context. >> at the gravesite john pays his respects to the relative he never met but grew to know and admire. >> just was the wrong place at the wrong time, bizarre set of circumstances that will never be repeated. >> you don't blame the shark? >> i don't blame the shark. it was a collision course. and i don't hold any animosity toward that shark or sharks in general. >> and if he doesn't, maybe we shouldn't either. >> osgood: ahead. on the trail to silence. choices... mart cak with quicksilver from capital one. you're earning unlimited 1.5% cash back
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the hill and two hours later, the patter of a sudden hail storm. these dunes in south central colorado famous for being the tallest in north america are also among the quietest places in the entire country. >> the dunes are one of the most remarkable acoustic environments in the world. and found when it strikes instead of bouncing back off tend to get absorbed into the dunes. so it's acting like a big sound deadening device. two things that affect -- >> scientist kirk carries backpack full of device he use as part of the natural sound. >> you see that screen there. >> the 30 days equipment will sit out in nature and just listen. tracking wind speed, traffic
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patterns and whatever else might stumble by. >> we try to capture the greatest hits, sort of albums of all the unusual or significant interesting sound. >> captured testifying from an elk bugling. to coyotes giving chase. in fact this pocket of sand is quiet enough you could record an actual album. >> really quiet recording studio bit be 20 decibels. when get up in the dunes we get down to the single digits. we've had readings on the order of three or four decibels. quite a bit quieter. >> with background nows lives it makes eavesdropping easy. it's crazy how sound travels in the dunes. from here i can hear every word of the conversation of those people all the way over
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>> when you get into these really quiet places all of a sudden the sound scape becomes amazingly expansive. suddenly feel much more closely connected to that place because every little sound you're aware of it. >> that connection to the sound of the place is crucial. even if it often goes unappreciated. >> almost every visitor carries camera goes home with an image. i wondered why people don't make recording because in some respects sound evokes memory more powerful than photos. >> a sound of silence is a natural resource quickly diminished. scientists like kirk are determined to make still preserve it for future generation. >> hearing is about 10,000 more
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>> osgood: now a page from our "sunday morning" almanac. june 12th, 196. 49 years ago today. the day of triumph for basic human right. for that was the day the united states supreme court unanimously struck down state laws banning interracial marriage. difficult as it may be to belief today, 16 states at that time still had such laws. virginia among them. virginia residents, richard mad tried to side step by marrying legally in the district of columbia in june of 1958. but back home in virginia they were soon found out. >> what happened after you got married? >> as he told cbs news correspondent. >> >> the 14th of july, we
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>> what has been the worst part pea bout all this for you? >> well, the worst thing. >> in january of 19 ix they loaded guilty to violating the so-called racial integrity act of 194. >> what did they tell you you had to do? >> the judge offered them a choice. a year in jail or exile. >> what happened after that? >> took your wife with you? >> that's right. >> they moved to the district of columbia where 1963 they began legal challenge that of thely led to the supreme court and vindication. as chief justice early warren wrote, wrote, the freedom to marry or not marry a person of another race
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individual and cannot can infringed by the state. >> i feel free now. >> richard is now gone but their victory celebrated by marriage rights advocates every year on this day called, appropriately enough, loving day. >> can we confer, sir? >> osgood: next. hamilton, tony nominated 16 times over. what sore elbow? advil liqui-gels make pain a distant memory nothing works faster stronger or longer what pain? advil.
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>> when we first met lin-manuel miranda hamilton, the musical he wrote and stars in, was still off broadway at new york's public theater. now, it's a smash on broadway. winner of a grammy and a pu atzernd nominated for a record breaking 16 tony awards. >> lin-manuel miranda. >> it's no exaggeration to say, it's a cultural phenomenon. >> talk less, smile more. don't let them know what your against. >> the show tells the story of hamilton's life and death at the hand of vice president allen burr played by leslie odom, ju a
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man and the times that he lived through. >> we take it as given that hip-hop music is the music of the revolution. ♪ >> is it the energy? >> because of the energy. it's because the hip-hop narrative is writing your way out of your circumstance. i joke, all my favorite hip hop song are really good musical theater. >> i want to get my corner of the sky. >> born out of wedlock in the caribbean and abandoned by his father, hamilton was just 22 when he served as general washington's aide to camp during the revolution they're war. and 34 when he became the country's first secretary of the treasury. >> i think that this is a classic immigrant story in terms of someone recognizing the opportunities in this
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turbulent wide open tote. >> rob wrote the biography that inspired miranda. >> he's the ultimate immigrant. >> the ultimate immigrant. the original. i dare say made greatest contribution of any immigrant in the history of the united states. >> mr. hamilton ♪ >> miranda's own parents came to new york from puerto rico. >> my father came here, same age at hamilton. he already graduated from a full ride for nyu. didn't speak english. learned it here while he was studying, and writing this story has helped me understand him. >> much has been made of the fact that the cast neither sound nor looks like the founding fathers. >> this is a story of america then told by america now.
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♪ .>> plays hamilton's wife. her sister played by renee. >> my father i told him i was doing this he was like, who are you playing. couple days later he was like, how are you playing her? i'm a little confused. >> this was a time when the political could get extremely personal. here is hamilton who favored more federal power debating thomas jefferson who favored states rights. ♪ makes perfect sense that hamilton and jefferso
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arguing about the role of federal government in the form of a rap. >> for jefferson, and for hamilton. ♪ response determines the winner. >> after he was slain by alan burr in their 1804 dual alexander hamilton was mourned as a hero. his life's journey as improbable as the mule call written about him. >> the way i look at this is -- ♪
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>> i do a better cher than you. >> you think so? >> actually -- you it's you think so -- >> it's "sunday morning" on cbs here again is charles osgood. >> osgood: sean hayes was tv sore rees "will and grace. now as lee cowan tells us this tony nominee back on broadway with an inspired role. >> we have 97 shows left. and i can do that today because there's 96. >> his dressing room on broadway, trying to get a sense ever whether actor sean hayes
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had any preshow rituals but somehow turned it all back on me. >> did you have any rituals before today? >> no. i don't. i wish i did. >> i shower. >> that's wonderful. >> he doesn't need any good luck rituals after all he's a god. says so, right there. >> this is just my regular thing for any job. just change the title of whatever gig. >> let me take a brief break from eternity and create a universe, just see what happens. >> yes, sean hayes, perhaps boast known as flamboyant jack mcfarland has descended to broadway as the almighty. to be more precise, the almighty invaded his bo.
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>> pretty much all him up there. for 90 straight minutes, on the mysteries of life, sitting on a divinely white couch. >> i'm still nervous. i still get nervous every single show. everybody is looking right at you saying, make me lau.gh >> you're playing god. >> and i'm playing god. so, there's that. >> an act of god to ear ref haven't, poignant and ever questioned which is pitting. he was raised catholic where he had lot of questions god couldn't answer. >> i come from a completely dysfunctional alcoholic family. so we kind of parented ourselves a little bit. >> it was his mom who raised him. his father abandoned the familiar low when shawn was only five. >> i remember he was -- he was about to exit the door and my mom said, you
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to say goodbye to your kid? he just goes -- he turns around gives me a half hearted hug. >> how did that sort of impact you growing up? >> i don't know. that's why i'm in therapy. i think i'm a lot of issues because of it. >> he was dealing with a lot back then. most of it all by himself. things even his mom and four siblings didn't know at the time. >> knowing you're gay as a kid in the 80s is a very scary thing of i felt like i couldn't full lie be myself. so i would lock myself in the room and watch saturday night life that was the best thing that ever happened. i'd imitate all those people at school. at school you find your niche is where you are accepted. that was theater. >> but he had another escape. the piano.
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started taking lessons. he thought he might one day be with concert pianist but classical music helped him find his funny bone instead. >> i can't remember the number. ♪ that's funny. i'm sure you did that to be funny. >> with mozart as amuse they went off into the world performing in college and playing helped support his move to los angeles where he landed a part in an independent film. >> you got to admit -- >> it was that performance that got him the audition for "will and grace." >> put your hand together for -- just jack! >> catapulted him to fame and made tv
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much has been written about the show's social impact. joe biden -- >> i think "will and grace" probably did more to educate the american public than almost anything anybody has ever done. >> i'm sorry to disappoint you. but this is who i am. >> you could never disappoint me. i just want you to be happy. >> but at the time despite winning an emmy, intense cultural spotlight was a bit too bright. >> it was a very difficult time. i struggled with myself -- do i come out, do i not come out. i don't have the d.n.a. to be a spokesperson for an entire community, i'm not that savvyo i'm not pill figures. >> did you feel that appreciate newer. >> i felt so much pressure to come out on other people's terms. i should have come out earlier.
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to show people it's okay and to educate people that i'm okay with myself and if you're not it's your problem not mine. but i wasn't smart enough. i was too young and naive, i was scared. i was so scared. >> the fear eventually subsided. he did come out publicly after will and grace ended and meet the love of his life. his husband, music producer scott. perhaps there is no better measure of their blissful life together as recent facebook video. ♪ the homemade lipsync performance just started out as a joke but quickly went viral. in fact they grew so popular starting getting music executive'te
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we thought it would be fun to f did you this song we say, he we thought it would be fun if you paid us to do that song. >> at 45, there's a lightness about him now. yet, his opening night after party there's still not but feeling -- >> it's a love-hate. you scare the crap out of yourself. and like, why would you choose to do this with your life. it drives me crazy but i still do it. >> his cast mates from "will and grace" are still close. debra messing played grace came to cheer on her long time friend. after all how many times do you get to party to god and ask, what are you doing? >> the overall message is you can believe in god, you can't believe, whatever you choose, you should believe in yourself first and look within yourself to better the world first. before re
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sort. >> that fits pretty bell with where you are in life. >> look at you wrapping things up. that's really -- >> it seems like you're comfortable with who you are and what you're doing. >> absolutely. >> took awhile to get there. >> absolutely. and learning, endless journey trying to figure out who you are and your purpose in life. >> thou shalt believe in thyself. >> but prepares for his summer long run as all knowing, wise cracking die tee, sean hayes found peace in happiness that seems true. [ applause ] a higher risk of stroke due to afib, >> i'm not. do a shorter set these days. i have a higher best.
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>> osgood: normal low actors try to remember their lines well before the opening night. and they all of this their own ways of doing that. >> am i only one that thinks that it's weird. >> it's not weird. maybe we're pioneers. >> hardly pioneers you have th dreeifferent hair driers. >> even the emmy award nomination for the comedy "modern family u. even though he's acting on stage since he was six. memorizing a new script can still tram maize jessie tyler ferguson. >> do you at all feel nervous? >> i'm terrified. i'm terrified. because it is -- it's just me. >> this time it's just him and
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still running when we met up in a rehearsal hall. >> these are lines that i haven't nailed down yet so i've highlighted them. >> not only a maitre d' in a hot new york restaurant. >> but also some other roles. >> i also play all the people call in to the restaurant trying to score reservation. i play the chef, hostess, business manager, i play naomi campbell's assess than. >> i work twice as hard on weekend. >> what have you been doing to learn this script? >> well, eating lots of leavey greens. i haven't looked at the whole picture, i've looked at small chunks. if i look at the whole 90 pages i would have to put myself in an insane asylum. i say, okay try to learn these ten pages then next s
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those ten plus another five. >> a tony nomination for best actor in the hit revival of "fiddler on the roof" shares the stage with lots ever actors. ♪ >> but the part of a poor russian jew struggling to hold on to his traditions is arduous. you're on stage how long? >> i'll on stage for three hours except for 13 minutes of the show. >> have you ever known an actor who just picks up a script, read the page and remembers it? >> there are a lot of people like that. i am not like that. >> but after 16 broadway shows and now six tony nominations, he has an established technique for learning lines. does gettys
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>> he let us follow him to follow the process. >> you can never be prepared enough. >> i don't like to leave anything to the last minute. >> january, 2015. >> as the good book says if a poor man eats a chicken one of them is sick. >> yes, he's learning his lines for fiddler while appearing in another broadway revival "cabaret." ♪ >> were you on stage performing "cabaret" and thinking about "fiddler"? >> yes. >> in may of last year it was time to work with a music coach.
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he became study session. why such a good place to learn a line? >> because everybody is in their own world. there's that noise. from the train. i disappear into the book. >> sometimes getting too caught up in an emotional theme. >> you know, with a lot of people that you don't know in a packed subway car and trying not to cry, that's my life. >> jessie tyler ferguson also studied during his commuting time, los angeles style. >> i look like a crazy person when i'm driving around in l.a. because i'm talking to myself, using gestures and like screaming, doing different characters. >> ferguson was memorizing his broadway role while shooting "mad earn familiar low" those lines given to him the morning of the taping. >> that's the thing on tv you holdr
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then you -- then start to sick it. >> as the good book says, we shall be healed. >> for danny learning lines is really homework. >> because of our tradition, we've kept our balance for many years. >> everyone knows who he is. >> and who god expects him to do. >> last september was the first rehearsal for fiddler just a week away, he was running lines with his wife can actress rebecca lucor. >> we understand each other. we understand each's other weaknesses and strengths how to help each other. >> when i'm up there on stage, she's up there with me. i think that she would say the same thing. >> he reached his goal, memorized the entire show before the first rehearsal.
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fiddler's director, bar let says, that is only the beginning. >> learning your lines is like the first step to moving into the mind of the character. for the process of learning the lines is a process of transformation. it's the process of becoming someone else. >> but brad way, some well-kno well-known, always unnamed actors never learn their lines. found himself whispering into a microphone, connected to a tiny ear piece worn by an actor. >> i had a script and i would feed him his lines. the conversation between me and the actor knowing the lines was reading the signs as to when he looked like he didn't know what the hell was about to happen next. >> he wouldn't be caught dead wearing one of those ear pieces but he stacey over a lg
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career, even the most accomplished actor is bound to go blank. have you ever forgotten a loin? >> yes. absolutely. >> what do you do? >> you keep going. people come to see a live performance. we're not robots. it hasn't been taped beforehand that's that's the exciting experience ever being there in the room. it's immediate. you're right there with that person and they're doing it life inront of you. things like that happen. >> osgood: coming up. >> hey, ali how are you doing? >> we stopped at the light together. >> one of the moments of my life. >> osgood: the chance encounter with muhammad ali.
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hometown had crossed paths with him at one time or another and they have been telling tales of their brush with greatness to steve hartman. >> to really know muhammad ali you need to come to louisville and talk to the people who knew him least. people who had just a brush with the greatest. those random strangers can testify to his true character as they did for us. repeatedly. >> you can't swing a dead cat around here. >> wayne hollered at him across a shopping mall. >> hey, ali i'm from louisville, how are you doing? he looks up says, hey, fool, that ain't no way to greet someone. i'm like, okay. i came down to shake his hand. >> kelly jones ran into him at the airport where ali asked to held his baby. >> i can specifically tell you they played patty cake.
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entire lifetime. >> derrick pulled up next to ali at traffic light and couldn't get away. >> we stopped at the red light together we were side by side he -- we talked maybe through three or four red lights. that's the type of man he was. >> whether you served him soup. >> a class act. >> or rode with him in elevator. >> one of the moments of my life. >> not only accommodated his fans. he enjoyed them. >> you'll remember that. >> we spent full day talking to people who met ali about what made him so great not one mentioned boxing. instead, to these folks, ali was gracious beyond compare. even if you were just a heckler at the mall. >> he made you feel like you were the most important person in the world. now he's passed on. but he'll never pass on.
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>> muhammad ali. we hardly knew ya. i'm phil mickelson, pro golfer. my psoriatic arthritis caused joint pain. just like my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and i was worried about joint damage. my doctor said joint pain from ra... can be a sign of existing joint damage... that could only get worse. he prescribed enbrel to help relieve pain and help stop further damage.
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serious, sometimes fatal, events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, nervous system and blood disorders, and allergic reactions have occurred. tell your doctor if you've been someplace where fungal infections are common or if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have been treated for... heart failure, or if you have persistent... fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. joint pain and damage... can go side by side. ask how enbrel can help relieve joint pain and help stop joint damage. enbrel, the number one rheumatologist-prescribed biologic. >> osgood: the classic from the grateful dead. t
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by the late jerry garcia. some familiar face is subject of our summer song, anthony mason has been watching the new dead come to life. >> the landmark theater last month, dead and company warmed up for the first gig of their summer tour. the group includes three of the grateful dead surviving core four. mickey hart, bill kreutzmann joined by john mayer. keyboardest jeff and former almond brothers, the line up has changed, the catalog hasn't. the crowd is here. to hear the grateful dead. >> a certain kind that requires a little adventure. you can watch the faces ove
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years. the front is still the same age. >> that's got to feel good to you. >> what we're doing musically is about concert revolution. >> a revolution that in a way started here at the filmore just over 50 years ago. >> you know, it was the first big room we played. >> dozens of dead poster lined the wall. including one of the first gigs promoter bill graham ever look booked at the venue in 1966. >> a journey, because somebody copyrighted the name. wouldn't print grateful dead. >> why? >> he didn't like it. >> how does it feel now? >> feels like home. >> the dead are icons here, a giant photo of the late jerry
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garcia who died in 1995, hangs in the stairwell. >> made us look like church almost. >> what was the connection you two guys had? >> we kept each other amused. the whole secret sauce, whether it be intellectually, musically or just back stage. >> that's got to be pretty special. >> it was. it was all i do for 30 years. >> weir joined the band when i was 16. drummer kreutzmann was just 16. >> you want to be in a band? sure. >> kreutzmann then brought in another drummer, mickey hart. >> asked him to sit in one night, that was that. the most important thing about that night i remember garcia said, this is what the grateful dead sounds like. ♪ >> i
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a communal home in haight ash bury. >> it was really crowded. >> where deadheads still carve tributes in the tree out front. >> he lived right up there. right at the top. bus used to come back and forth. this is the home of the grateful dead. he opened window just give them a little moon out there. if that didn't work, bob w,ir would be up on the roof with water balloons. >> this is house of popular local band which plays hard rock music. they call themself grateful dead. >> in the summer of love, cbs went inside the house for documentary called "the hippie temp picks." >> i think personally the people turn out. >> later that year, police raided the house,
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band members on drug charges. >> he actually planted two bricks in the house. could have looked behind the file cabinet and found it. >> on the top shelf. he had something to smoke. ♪ >> last summer on the dead's 50th anniversary, the four surviving members played their fair thee well tour. billed as hire final concert together for 365,000. >> just pure love if you could ever imagine anything like. that i've never seen anything like that before. >> with bassist boying out, the others chose to go on as dead and company. how do you view this after that? >> this a different adventure, i'm no where near done. >> some folks expecting after
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on my golf game or something. >> you couldn't do that? >> i'm saving that for my golden years. >> dead and company came together last fall. the younger members are still learning to keep up with the dead's deep jam. how often do you get that, where the hell is he going with this? >> with this band? where the hell am i going with this? >> there has to come a moment where it's time to play guitar solo and i'm just playing the solo i'm not wondering what bob thinks about it. >> do you feel that out there? >> yeah. first time i played with john boy here i ascertained that this guy can handle it. >> weir and mayer connected when they played together on tv show early last year. >> we were going to have something to say.
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nauseous with excitement. >> this is home while you're here? >> yeah. at the risk of being too literal, i live in an rv in bob weir's parking lot while i'm playing with dead and company. >> during two weeks of rehearsal he lived out back of his studio. >> that's work. i defy anybody to show me -- >> the 38-year-old singer has put his solo career on hold for the summer tour. >> everybody has left, bob. >> what does it mean to you to be in this band now? >> oh, man. i have so much more connection with my guitar than i ever had. this solidifies musician over celebrity.
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love the most. the reason i wanted to be in this band was to be able to interact with it live. what i imagine an actor saying, i really want to be in a scene with pitino. >> you're pitino, bob, did you know that? >> you talking to me? >> actually that's deniro. but the 68-year-old guitarist has been thinking a lot about legacy. on the road last year, bob weir had a dome that persuaded him the dead's long strange trip has a long way to go. >> what did you see in that dream? >> we were on stage. suddenly i found myself like 20 feet behind my own head looking at myself playing, then i look over, his hair is grey it's 20 years later, i look back at myself there's somebody with brown hair in late 50s. >> it's not new. >> this is the mus
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>> how did it feel? >> it felt altogether right and felt logical. okay, that's what i've been up to all my life. >> osgood: ahead. i use what's already inside me to reach my goals. so i liked when my doctor told me that i may reach my blood sugar and a1c goals by activating what's within me with once-weekly trulicity. trulicity is not insulin. it helps activate my body to do what it's supposed to do release its own insulin. trulicity responds when my blood sugar rises. i take it once a week, and it works 24/7. it comes in an easy-to-use pen
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e a little weight. trulicity is a once-weekly injectable prescription medicine to improve blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. it should be used along with diet and exercise. trulicity is not recommended as the first medicine to treat diabetes and should not be used by people with severe stomach or intestinal problems or people with type i diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. trulicity is not insulin and has not been studied with long-acting insulin. do not take trulicity if you or anyone in your family has had medullary thyroid cancer or multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2 or if you are allergic to trulicity or its ingredients. stop using trulicity and call your doctor right away if you have symptoms of an allergic reaction, such as itching, rash, or difficulty breathing; if you have signs of pancreatitis such as severe stomach pain that will not go away and may move to your back, with or without vomiting or if you have symptoms of thyroid cancer, which may include a lump or swelling in your neck, hoarseness, trouble swallowing, or shortness of breath. medicines like trulicity may cause stomach problems, which could be severe. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions d any medicines you take. taking trulicity with a sulfonylurea or insulin
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may increase your risk for low blood sugar. common side effects include nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, decreased appetite, and indigestion. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney failure. with trulicity, i click to activate what's within me. if you want help improving your a1c and blood sugar numbers with a non-insulin option, click to activate your within. ask your doctor about once-weekly trulicity. >> osgood: the actors who wans the broad kay casting call probably all hope to win a tony some day. first they need to survive that audition. as now shows us even biggest names there are no guarantees. >> was that because you were female? >> i was banking on the fact that -- >> are you at point where auditioning is behind you for
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every role? >> one would think they would. >> but i really want to do i know they're not thinking of me because they think i'm not the queen. i would say, look, let me just maybe show you what i can do with this. >> for all actors auditioning is part of the job. from veteran dame helen mirren. >> to broadway new comer. >> i think i always have to audition because i'm not even sure if i'm right for a part. >> this year's tony nominee, leslie odom who played leslie in "hamilton." >> something about fighting for it that -- got to prove yourself. i'll never be above that. >> often the first person an actor sees when trying out is the
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>> what a casting director does is, they are a connectar, they can be a lifeline especially if they champion you which bernie does for me for 20 years. >> a top casting director. >> nothing more rewarding than finding new people. >> he sees thousand of actors audition here in his offices each month. ♪ >> find out who the best people for show the creative team because they don't have the time to see every single actor. >> what do you think? >> such a huge job, there's so many really fine talented actors out there. >> kira knows firsthand she's been on both side of the audition table as actress and as executive producer of the recent
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tv series "proofer." >> it really takes a special casting director not just to hand you a list that has no imagination i tot. >> search wick and her team couldn't settle on actress. jennifer beales was the last to audition. >> i didn't know for myself. >> she did the first scene it was just that moment where an actor just goes, that would be my part. thank you very much. and you know, i mean, we read the rest of the scenes but i wanted to turn around, let's go celebrate, because there she is. >> to get to that point casting directors cast a wide net, one three hour open call with anyone can audition. >> how are you? >> one of the casting directors heard more than 100 actors sing just a few bar
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theater songs. ♪ >> some people ask, how do you sit through hundreds of people when most of them are not right? because, you know what, one might be. >> the office handles multiple projects from theater to television, commercials to movies. when director rob mr. shall wanted to create the movie musical "into the woods" fill it with top stars he hired telsy, first they needed one really big name. >> meryl streep that was name. >> to other stars once a role is past someone like meryl streep. >> yes, when you have someone like meryl streep. >> suggested a rising star streep already knew. >> emily blount
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audition. ♪ >> it was so magical in the room you couldn't believe it. i remember at the end emily saying to me, are you crying, rob? she won the role. >> in fact eight years earlier it was another casting director, ellen lewis who cast then little known actress blount opposite streep and mid her a star. >> i don't understand why it's so difficult to confirm. >> oil sorry. >> lewis has been the casting director on 72 films including "a legal of their own" "forrest gump and "the birdcage" for 25 years has been go-to casting director. their first, the 1990 mob classic "good fellas." >> it's ledge encarry.
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absolutely. >> italian eat refamous for mob mystique, it became a casting gold mine for lewis. >> i knew that it was fantastic place to get the overall flavor of "good fellas." >> how are you doing? >> frankie carbone. >> the arrange add dinner so lewis could screen real life customers looked the part. >> someone brought over to the table knowing that we would not be able to use them in the film because maybe they were a little too connected. we ended up casting about six people. a guy named johnny. >> what did i tell you? you don't buy anything, hear me? >> they were able t
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fantastic feeling of veracity to the film. >> in fact, actor leslie odom junior says there's an upside even in rejection. >> gets you better at auditioning. you got to be good at auditioning. every single one of them has gotten to this moment. i'm grateful for all of it now. because it makes you stronger. getting roid rage. hemorrhoid. these are the worst, right? i'm gonna buy them. boom. i'll take them. impulse buy. ommmmmmmmmmm. presenting the american express blue cash everyday card with cash back on purchases. it's all happening. and no annual fee. here we go! cash back on purchases. backed by the service and security of american express.
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we'll take questions after we're finished with prepared statements. >> the fbi has confirmed the subject involved in this shooting incident at this time we're making notifications to the next of kin so we will that have that name to be officially released to you at the next press conference. what i want to pout put out right now, people come and go
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nightclubs such as these what i am asking if anyone out there attended this nightclub then left before the shooting happened, i would urge you to still call in and come talk to our invest give for you don't know what you may or may not have seen we appreciate everyone coming forward no matter how small the evidence in your mind may be. the other thing we're actually setting up family assistance center the at hampton inn at 43 columbia street, we currently have it now at rnc but move now to the hotel in order to accommodate more family members attempt to reunite people with either their loved ones or gather information on people who have not yet been located. >> in addition to 53 in the hospital -- >> you mentioned earlier that -- >> we have couple more people then we'll answer some
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>> good morning. as many of you are aware a little after 2:00 this morning, we were notified of many victims, gunshot victims as central florida's only level one trauma center we immediately activated our mass casualty incident plan. we immediately brought in six trauma surgeons to respond including one pediatric trauma surgeon. we spent the morning operating on a number of victims. we continue to operate on them, we have found many of them are critically ill as result of their injuries. and we are in the process of trying to reunite families as we identify the names of these victims as has been mentioned this will take some time. we ask for your patience. but we will reunite the families of the victims just as quickly as we can. >> do you need blood donors? >> blood is a wonderful gift. that can all be arranged through the local bloo
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please don't come to the local hospitals. but you can work through the local blood banks be able to donate that would be a tremendous help. thank you. >> good morning, my name is -- i'm the president, senior imam of the central florida, america islam. i'm here today to stand as faith leader with our law enforcement community and our city leadership in this hour of horror that was brought upon our city. i've worked with these leaders for over 20 years, i know their caliber, their strength and their determination to make sure this city is safe and i cal
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